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  1. Dictionary
    Track
    /trak/

    noun

    • 1. a rough path or minor road, typically one beaten by use rather than constructed: "follow the track to the farm" Similar pathpathwayfootpathlane
    • 2. a mark or line of marks left by a person, animal, or vehicle in passing: "he followed the tracks made by the cars in the snow" Similar tracesmarksimpressionsprints

    verb

    • 1. follow the course or trail of (someone or something), typically in order to find them or note their location at various points: "secondary radars that track the aircraft in flight"
    • 2. (of wheels) run so that the back ones are exactly in the track of the front ones.
  2. 1. : a footprint whether recent or fossil. the huge track of a dinosaur. 2. a. : detectable evidence (such as the wake of a ship, a line of footprints, or a wheel rut) that something has passed. b. : a path made by or as if by repeated footfalls : trail. c. : a course laid out especially for racing. d. : the parallel rails of a railroad. e(1)

  3. 1. the mark or trail left by something that has passed by: the track of an animal. 2. any road or path affording passage, esp a rough one. 3. (Railways) a rail or pair of parallel rails on which a vehicle, such as a locomotive, runs, esp the rails together with the sleepers, ballast, etc, on a railway.

  4. a type of path or road, often in the shape of a ring, that has been specially designed and built for sports events, especially racing: an all-weather track. a dog / horse track. The runners are now on their final lap of the track. See also. racetrack. Alan Schein/Corbis/GettyImages. B2 [ U ] US.

  5. The noun track can describe a variety of paths, such as the rails that trains chug along, a course that racehorses run, or the big oval course in an ice rink. If you're competing in a five-lap race and you have the fastest speed after the first four laps, you're on track to win the race.

  6. A track is a piece of ground, often oval-shaped, that is used for races involving athletes, cars, bicycles, horses, or dogs called greyhounds. The two men turned to watch the horses going round the track. ...the athletics track. Synonyms: running track, course, circuit [British], racecourse More Synonyms of track.

  7. Track definition: a structure consisting of a pair of parallel lines of rails with their crossties, on which a railroad train, trolley, or the like runs.. See examples of TRACK used in a sentence.

  8. TRACK meaning: 1 : a mark left on the ground by a moving animal, person, or vehicle usually plural; 2 : a path or trail that is made by people or animals walking through a field, forest, etc.

  9. to continue to know what is happening to someone or something: He changes jobs so often - I find it hard to keep track of what he's doing. lose track. B2. to not know what is happening to someone or something any more: I've lost track of how much we've spent. on track. making progress and likely to succeed:

  10. verb. /træk/ Verb Forms. follow. [transitive, intransitive] track (somebody/something) to find someone or something by following the marks, signs, information, etc., that they have left behind them hunters tracking and shooting bears. Take your English to the next level.

  11. A mark or series of marks or other discoverable evidence left by a person, animal, or thing that has passed, as a footprint, wheel rut, wake of a boat, etc. A trace or vestige. A path along which something moves; a course. Following the track of an airplane on radar.

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